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The Communist Manifesto

The Communist Manifesto (German: Kommunistisches Manifest), originally the Manifesto of the Communist Party (German: Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei), is a political pamphlet written by German philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Commissioned by the Communist League and originally published in London in 1848, the Manifesto remains one of the world's most influential political documents.[citation needed] It presents an analytical approach to class struggle and criticizes capitalism and the capitalist mode of production, without attempting to predict communism's potential future forms.

The Communist Manifesto
First edition in German
AuthorKarl Marx and Friedrich Engels
TranslatorSamuel Moore
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageGerman
GenrePhilosophy
Publication date
21 February 1848
TextThe Communist Manifesto at Wikisource

The Communist Manifesto summarises Marx and Engels' theories concerning the nature of society and politics, namely that, in their own words, "[t]he history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles". It also briefly features their ideas for how the capitalist society of the time would eventually be replaced by socialism. In the last paragraph of the Manifesto, the authors call for a "forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions", which served as a call for communist revolutions around the world.[1][2]

In 2013, The Communist Manifesto was registered to UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme along with Marx's Capital, Volume I.[3]

Synopsis

The Communist Manifesto is divided into a preamble and four sections. The introduction begins: "A spectre is haunting Europe—the spectre of communism."[4] Pointing out that it was widespread for politicians—both those in government and those in the opposition—to label their opponents as communists, the authors infer that those in power acknowledge communism to be a power in itself. Subsequently, the introduction exhorts communists to openly publish their views and aims, which is the very function of the manifesto.[5]

The first section of the Manifesto, "Bourgeois and Proletarians",[6] outlines historical materialism, and states that "the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles".[7] According to the authors, all societies in history had taken the form of an oppressed majority exploited by an oppressive minority. In Marx and Engels' time, they say that under capitalism, the industrial working class, or 'proletariat', engages in class struggle against the owners of the means of production, the 'bourgeoisie'.[8]The bourgeoisie, through the "constant revolutionising of production [and] uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions" have emerged as the supreme class in society, displacing all the old powers of feudalism.[9] The bourgeoisie constantly exploits the proletariat for its labour power, creating profit for themselves and accumulating capital. In doing so, however, Marx and Engels describe the bourgeoisie as serving as "its own grave-diggers"; as they believe the proletariat will inevitably become conscious of their own potential and rise to power through revolution, overthrowing the bourgeoisie.

"Proletarians and Communists", the second section, starts by stating the relationship of 'conscious communists' (i.e. those who identify as communists) to the rest of the working class. The communists' party will not oppose other working-class parties, but unlike them, it will express the general will and defend the common interests of the world's proletariat as a whole, independent of all nationalities. The section goes on to defend communism from various objections, including claims that it advocates communal prostitution or disincentivises people from working. The section ends by outlining a set of short-term demands—among them a progressive income tax; abolition of inheritances and private property; abolition of child labour; free public education; nationalisation of the means of transport and communication; centralisation of credit via a national bank; expansion of publicly owned land, etc.—the implementation of which is argued would result in the precursor to a stateless and classless society.

The third section, "Socialist and Communist Literature", distinguishes communism from other socialist doctrines prevalent at the time—these being broadly categorised as Reactionary Socialism; Conservative or Bourgeois Socialism; and Critical-Utopian Socialism and Communism. While the degree of reproach toward rival perspectives varies, all are dismissed for advocating reformism and failing to recognise the pre-eminent revolutionary role of the working class.

"Position of the Communists in Relation to the Various Opposition Parties", the concluding section of the Manifesto, briefly discusses the communist position on struggles in specific countries in the mid-nineteenth century such as in France, Switzerland, Poland, and lastly Germany, which is said to be "on the eve of a bourgeois revolution" and predicts that a world revolution will soon follow. It ends by declaring an alliance with the democratic socialists, boldly supporting other communist revolutions and calling for united international proletarian action—"Working Men of All Countries, Unite!".

Writing

 
Only surviving page from the first draft of the Manifesto, handwritten by Karl Marx

In spring 1847, Marx and Engels joined the League of the Just, who were quickly convinced by the duo's ideas of "critical communism". At its First Congress in 2–9 June, the League tasked Engels with drafting a "profession of faith", but such a document was later deemed inappropriate for an open, non-confrontational organisation. Engels nevertheless wrote the "Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith", detailing the League's programme. A few months later, in October, Engels arrived at the League's Paris branch to find that Moses Hess had written an inadequate manifesto for the group, now called the League of Communists. In Hess's absence, Engels severely criticised this manifesto, and convinced the rest of the League to entrust him with drafting a new one. This became the draft Principles of Communism, described as "less of a credo and more of an exam paper".

On 23 November, just before the Communist League's Second Congress (29 November – 8 December 1847), Engels wrote to Marx, expressing his desire to eschew the catechism format in favour of the manifesto, because he felt it "must contain some history." On the 28th, Marx and Engels met at Ostend in Belgium, and a few days later, gathered at the Soho, London headquarters of the German Workers' Education Association to attend the Congress. Over the next ten days, intense debate raged between League functionaries; Marx eventually dominated the others and, overcoming "stiff and prolonged opposition",[10] in Harold Laski's words, secured a majority for his programme. The League thus unanimously adopted a far more combative resolution than that at the First Congress in June. Marx (especially) and Engels were subsequently commissioned to draw up a manifesto for the League.

Upon returning to Brussels, Marx engaged in "ceaseless procrastination", according to his biographer Francis Wheen. Working only intermittently on the Manifesto, he spent much of his time delivering lectures on political economy at the German Workers' Education Association, writing articles for the Deutsche-Brüsseler-Zeitung, and giving a long speech on free trade. Following this, he even spent a week (17–26 January 1848) in Ghent to establish a branch of the Democratic Association there. Subsequently, having not heard from Marx for nearly two months, the Central Committee of the Communist League sent him an ultimatum on 24 or 26 January, demanding he submit the completed manuscript by 1 February. This imposition spurred Marx on, who struggled to work without a deadline, and he seems to have rushed to finish the job in time. For evidence of this, historian Eric Hobsbawm points to the absence of rough drafts, only one page of which survives.

In all, the Manifesto was written over 6–7 weeks. Although Engels is credited as co-writer, the final draft was penned exclusively by Marx. From the 26 January letter, Laski infers that even the Communist League considered Marx to be the sole draftsman and that he was merely their agent, imminently replaceable. Further, Engels himself wrote in 1883: "The basic thought running through the Manifesto [...] belongs solely and exclusively to Marx". Although Laski does not disagree, he suggests that Engels underplays his own contribution with characteristic modesty and points out the "close resemblance between its substance and that of the [Principles of Communism]". Laski argues that while writing the Manifesto, Marx drew from the "joint stock of ideas" he developed with Engels "a kind of intellectual bank account upon which either could draw freely".[11]

Publication

Initial publication and obscurity, 1848–1872

 
A scene from the German March 1848 Revolution in Berlin

In late February 1848, the Manifesto was anonymously published by the Workers' Educational Association (Kommunistischer Arbeiterbildungsverein), based at 46 Liverpool Street, in the Bishopsgate Without area of the City of London.[12] Written in German, the 23-page pamphlet was titled Manifest der kommunistischen Partei and had a dark-green cover. It was reprinted three times and serialised in the Deutsche Londoner Zeitung, a newspaper for German émigrés. On 4 March, one day after the serialisation in the Zeitung began, Marx was expelled by Belgian police. Two weeks later, around 20 March, a thousand copies of the Manifesto reached Paris, and from there to Germany in early April. In April–May the text was corrected for printing and punctuation mistakes; Marx and Engels would use this 30-page version as the basis for future editions of the Manifesto.

Although the Manifesto's prelude announced that it was "to be published in the English, French, German, Italian, Flemish and Danish languages", the initial printings were only in German. Polish and Danish translations soon followed the German original in London, and by the end of 1848, a Swedish translation was published with a new title—The Voice of Communism: Declaration of the Communist Party. In June–November 1850 the Manifesto of the Communist Party was published in English for the first time when George Julian Harney serialised Helen Macfarlane's translation in his Chartist magazine The Red Republican. Her version begins: "A frightful hobgoblin stalks throughout Europe. We are haunted by a ghost, the ghost of Communism".[13][14] For her translation, the Lancashire-based Macfarlane probably consulted Engels, who had abandoned his own English translation half way. Harney's introduction revealed the Manifesto's hitherto-anonymous authors' identities for the first time.

 
Immediately after the Cologne Communist Trial of late 1852, the Communist League disbanded itself.

A French translation of the Manifesto was published just before the working-class June Days Uprising was crushed. Its influence in the Europe-wide Revolutions of 1848 was restricted to Germany, where the Cologne-based Communist League and its newspaper Neue Rheinische Zeitung, edited by Marx, played an important role. Within a year of its establishment, in May 1849, the Zeitung was suppressed; Marx was expelled from Germany and had to seek lifelong refuge in London. In 1851, members of the Communist League's central board were arrested by the Prussian Secret Police. At their trial in Cologne 18 months later in late 1852 they were sentenced to 3–6 years' imprisonment. For Engels, the revolution was "forced into the background by the reaction that began with the defeat of the Paris workers in June 1848, and was finally excommunicated 'by law' in the conviction of the Cologne Communists in November 1852".

After the defeat of the 1848 revolutions the Manifesto fell into obscurity, where it remained throughout the 1850s and 1860s. Hobsbawm says that by November 1850 the Manifesto "had become sufficiently scarce for Marx to think it worth reprinting section III [...] in the last issue of his [short-lived] London magazine". Over the next two decades only a few new editions were published; these include an (unauthorised and occasionally inaccurate) 1869 Russian translation by Mikhail Bakunin in Geneva and an 1866 edition in Berlin—the first time the Manifesto was published in Germany. According to Hobsbawm: "By the middle 1860s virtually nothing that Marx had written in the past was any longer in print". However, John Cowell-Stepney did publish an abridged version in the Social Economist in August/September 1869,[15] in time for the Basle Congress.

Rise, 1872–1917

In the early 1870s, the Manifesto and its authors experienced a revival in fortunes. Hobsbawm identifies three reasons for this. The first is the leadership role Marx played in the International Workingmen's Association (aka the First International). Secondly, Marx also came into much prominence among socialists—and equal notoriety among the authorities—for his support of the Paris Commune of 1871, elucidated in The Civil War in France. Lastly, and perhaps most significantly in the popularisation of the Manifesto, was the treason trial of German Social Democratic Party (SPD) leaders. During the trial prosecutors read the Manifesto out loud as evidence; this meant that the pamphlet could legally be published in Germany. Thus in 1872 Marx and Engels rushed out a new German-language edition, writing a preface that identified that several portions that became outdated in the quarter century since its original publication. This edition was also the first time the title was shortened to The Communist Manifesto (Das Kommunistische Manifest), and it became the version the authors based future editions upon. Between 1871 and 1873, the Manifesto was published in over nine editions in six languages; on 30 December 1871 it was published in the United States for the first time in Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly of New York City.[16] However, by the mid 1870s the Communist Manifesto remained Marx and Engels' only work to be even moderately well-known.

Over the next forty years, as social-democratic parties rose across Europe and parts of the world, so did the publication of the Manifesto alongside them, in hundreds of editions in thirty languages. Marx and Engels wrote a new preface for the 1882 Russian edition, translated by Georgi Plekhanov in Geneva. In it they wondered if Russia could directly become a communist society, or if she would become capitalist first like other European countries. After Marx's death in 1883, Engels provided the prefaces for five editions between 1888 and 1893. Among these is the 1888 English edition, translated by Samuel Moore and approved by Engels, who also provided notes throughout the text. It has been the standard English-language edition ever since.[citation needed]

The principal region of its influence, in terms of editions published, was in the "central belt of Europe", from Russia in the east to France in the west. In comparison, the pamphlet had little impact on politics in southwest and southeast Europe, and moderate presence in the north. Outside Europe, Chinese and Japanese translations were published, as were Spanish editions in Latin America. The first Chinese edition of the book was translated by Zhu Zhixin after the 1905 Russian Revolution in a Tongmenghui newspaper along with articles on socialist movements in Europe, North America, and Japan.[17] This uneven geographical spread in the Manifesto's popularity reflected the development of socialist movements in a particular region as well as the popularity of Marxist variety of socialism there. There was not always a strong correlation between a social-democratic party's strength and the Manifesto's popularity in that country. For instance, the German SPD printed only a few thousand copies of the Communist Manifesto every year, but a few hundred thousand copies of the Erfurt Programme. Further, the mass-based social-democratic parties of the Second International did not require their rank and file to be well-versed in theory; Marxist works such as the Manifesto or Das Kapital were read primarily by party theoreticians. On the other hand, small, dedicated militant parties and Marxist sects in the West took pride in knowing the theory; Hobsbawm says: "This was the milieu in which 'the clearness of a comrade could be gauged invariably from the number of earmarks on his Manifesto'".

Ubiquity, 1917–present

 
Following the 1917 October Revolution, Marx and Engels' classics like The Communist Manifesto were distributed far and wide.

Following the October Revolution of 1917 that swept the Vladimir Lenin-led Bolsheviks to power in Russia, the world's first socialist state was founded explicitly along Marxist lines. The Soviet Union, which Bolshevik Russia would become a part of, was a one-party state under the rule of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU). Unlike their mass-based counterparts of the Second International, the CPSU and other Leninist parties like it in the Third International expected their members to know the classic works of Marx, Engels and Lenin. Further, party leaders were expected to base their policy decisions on Marxist-Leninist ideology. Therefore works such as the Manifesto were required reading for the party rank-and-file.

Therefore the widespread dissemination of Marx and Engels' works became an important policy objective; backed by a sovereign state, the CPSU had relatively inexhaustible resources for this purpose. Works by Marx, Engels, and Lenin were published on a very large scale, and cheap editions of their works were available in several languages across the world. These publications were either shorter writings or they were compendia such as the various editions of Marx and Engels' Selected Works, or their Collected Works. This affected the destiny of the Manifesto in several ways. Firstly, in terms of circulation; in 1932 the American and British Communist Parties printed several hundred thousand copies of a cheap edition for "probably the largest mass edition ever issued in English". Secondly the work entered political-science syllabuses in universities, which would only expand after the Second World War. For its centenary in 1948, its publication was no longer the exclusive domain of Marxists and academicians; general publishers too printed the Manifesto in large numbers. "In short, it was no longer only a classic Marxist document", Hobsbawm noted, "it had become a political classic tout court".

Total sales have been estimated at 500 million, and one of the four best-selling books of all time.[18]

Even after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc in the 1990s, the Communist Manifesto remains ubiquitous; Hobsbawm says that "In states without censorship, almost certainly anyone within reach of a good bookshop, and certainly anyone within reach of a good library, not to mention the internet, can have access to it". The 150th anniversary once again brought a deluge of attention in the press and the academia, as well as new editions of the book fronted by introductions to the text by academics. One of these, The Communist Manifesto: A Modern Edition by Verso, was touted by a critic in the London Review of Books as being a "stylish red-ribboned edition of the work. It is designed as a sweet keepsake, an exquisite collector's item. In Manhattan, a prominent Fifth Avenue store put copies of this choice new edition in the hands of shop-window mannequins, displayed in come-hither poses and fashionable décolletage".

Legacy

"With the clarity and brilliance of genius, this work outlines a new world-conception, consistent materialism, which also embraces the realm of social life; dialectics, as the most comprehensive and profound doctrine of development; the theory of the class struggle and of the world-historic revolutionary role of the proletariat—the creator of a new, communist society."

Vladimir Lenin on the Manifesto, 1914[19]

A number of late-20th- and 21st-century writers have commented on the Communist Manifesto's continuing relevance. In a special issue of the Socialist Register commemorating the Manifesto's 150th anniversary, Peter Osborne argued that it was "the single most influential text written in the nineteenth century".[20] Academic John Raines in 2002 noted: "In our day this Capitalist Revolution has reached the farthest corners of the earth. The tool of money has produced the miracle of the new global market and the ubiquitous shopping mall. Read The Communist Manifesto, written more than one hundred and fifty years ago, and you will discover that Marx foresaw it all".[21] In 2003, English Marxist Chris Harman stated: "There is still a compulsive quality to its prose as it provides insight after insight into the society in which we live, where it comes from and where it's going to. It is still able to explain, as mainstream economists and sociologists cannot, today's world of recurrent wars and repeated economic crisis, of hunger for hundreds of millions on the one hand and 'overproduction' on the other. There are passages that could have come from the most recent writings on globalisation".[22] Alex Callinicos, editor of International Socialism, stated in 2010: "This is indeed a manifesto for the 21st century".[23] Writing in The London Evening Standard , Andrew Neather cited Verso Books' 2012 re-edition of The Communist Manifesto with an introduction by Eric Hobsbawm as part of a resurgence of left-wing-themed ideas which includes the publication of Owen Jones' book Chavs: The Demonization of the Working Class and Jason Barker's documentary Marx Reloaded.[24]

 
Soviet Union stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Manifesto

In contrast, critics such as revisionist Marxist and reformist socialist Eduard Bernstein distinguished between "immature" early Marxism—as exemplified by The Communist Manifesto written by Marx and Engels in their youth—that he opposed for its violent Blanquist tendencies and later "mature" Marxism that he supported.[25] This latter form refers to Marx in his later life seemingly claiming that socialism, under certain circumstances, could be achieved through peaceful means through legislative reform in democratic societies.[26] Bernstein declared that the massive and homogeneous working-class claimed in the Communist Manifesto did not exist, and that contrary to claims of a proletarian majority emerging, the middle-class was growing under capitalism and not disappearing as Marx had claimed. Bernstein noted that the working-class was not homogeneous but heterogeneous, with divisions and factions within it, including socialist and non-socialist trade unions. Marx himself, later in his life, acknowledged that the middle-class was not disappearing in his work Theories of Surplus Value (1863). The obscurity of the later work means that Marx's acknowledgement of this error is not well known.[27] George Boyer described the Manifesto as "very much a period piece, a document of what was called the 'hungry' 1840s".[28]

Many have drawn attention to the passage in the Manifesto that seems to sneer at the stupidity of the rustic: "The bourgeoisie [...] draws all nations [...] into civilisation[.] [...] It has created enormous cities [...] and thus rescued a considerable part of the population from the idiocy [sic] of rural life".[29] However, as Eric Hobsbawm noted:

[W]hile there is no doubt that Marx at this time shared the usual townsman's contempt for, as well as ignorance of, the peasant milieu, the actual and analytically more interesting German phrase ("dem Idiotismus des Landlebens entrissen") referred not to "stupidity" but to "the narrow horizons", or "the isolation from the wider society" in which people in the countryside lived. It echoed the original meaning of the Greek term idiotes from which the current meaning of "idiot" or "idiocy" is derived, namely "a person concerned only with his own private affairs and not with those of the wider community". In the course of the decades since the 1840s, and in movements whose members, unlike Marx, were not classically educated, the original sense was lost and was misread.[30]

Influences

Marx and Engels' political influences were wide-ranging, reacting to and taking inspiration from German idealist philosophy, French socialism, and English and Scottish political economy. The Communist Manifesto also takes influence from literature. In Jacques Derrida's work, Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning and the New International, he uses William Shakespeare's Hamlet to frame a discussion of the history of the International, showing in the process the influence that Shakespeare's work had on Marx and Engels' writing.[31] In his essay, "Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx", Christopher N. Warren makes the case that English poet John Milton also had a substantial influence on Marx and Engels' work.[32] Historians of 19th-century reading habits have confirmed that Marx and Engels would have read these authors and it is known that Marx loved Shakespeare in particular.[33][34][35] Milton, Warren argues, also shows a notable influence on The Communist Manifesto, saying: "Looking back on Milton’s era, Marx saw a historical dialectic founded on inspiration in which freedom of the press, republicanism, and revolution were closely joined".[36] Milton’s republicanism, Warren continues, served as "a useful, if unlikely, bridge" as Marx and Engels sought to forge a revolutionary international coalition. The Manifesto also makes reference to the "revolutionary" antibourgeois social criticism of Thomas Carlyle, whom Engels had read as early as May 1843.[37][38][39]

Editions

  • Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels (2004) [1848]. Manifesto of the Communist Party. Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved on 14 March 2015.

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Marx's philosophy and the *necessity* of violent politics – Stephen Hicks, PhD". from the original on 24 September 2019. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  2. ^ Kuromiya, Hiroaki (2017), "Communism, Violence and Terror", in Pons, Silvio; Smith, Stephen (eds.), The Cambridge History of Communism, Cambridge University Press, pp. 279–303, doi:10.1017/9781316137024.014, ISBN 9781316137024, from the original on 24 September 2020, retrieved 24 September 2019
  3. ^ "Schriften von Karl Marx: "Das Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei" (1948) und "Das Kapital", ernster Band (1867)" 22 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine. UNESCO.
  4. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 34.
  5. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 34.
  6. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 35-48.
  7. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 35.
  8. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 36.
  9. ^ Marx, Engels & 1977 [1848], p. 36-7.
  10. ^ Laski, Harold (1948). "Introduction". Communist Manifesto: Socialist Landmark. George Allen and Unwin. p. 22.
  11. ^ Laski, Harold (1948). "Introduction". Communist Manifesto: Socialist Landmark. George Allen and Unwin. p. 26.
  12. ^ Bosmajian, Haig A. "A RHETORICAL APPROACH TO THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO" (PDF). dalspace.library.dal.ca. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
  13. ^ Yeoman, Louise. "Helen McFarlane – the radical feminist admired by Karl Marx 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine". BBC Scotland. 25 November 2012.
  14. ^ Usher, Robert J. (1910). "The Bibliography of The Communist Manifesto". Papers. 5: 109–114. JSTOR 24306239.
  15. ^ Leopold, David (2015). "Marx Engels and Other Socialisms". In Carver, Terrell; Farr, James (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to The Communist Manifesto. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  16. ^ Marx, Karl; Engels, Frederick (30 December 1871). "German Communism - Manifesto of the German Communist Party". Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly. 04 (7): 3–7, 12–13.
  17. ^ Pons, Silvio; Smith, Stephen A., eds. (2017). The Cambridge History of Communism: Volume 1: World Revolution and Socialism in One Country 1917–1941. The Cambridge History of Communism. Vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316137024. ISBN 978-1-107-09284-6.
  18. ^ Seven facts about Karl Marx
  19. ^ Marx/Engels Collected Works, Volume 6, p. xxvi.
  20. ^ Osborne, Peter. 1998. "Remember the Future? The Communist Manifesto as Historical and Cultural Form" in Panitch, Leo and Colin Leys, Eds., The Communist Manifesto Now: Socialist Register, 1998 London: Merlin Press, p. 170. Available online from the Socialist Register 20 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine archives. Retrieved November 2015.
  21. ^ Raines, John (2002). "Introduction". Marx on Religion (Marx, Karl). Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 5.
  22. ^ Harman, Chris (2010). "The Manifesto and the World of 1848". The Communist Manifesto (Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich). Bloomsbury, London: Bookmarks. p. 3.
  23. ^ Callinicos, Alex (2010). "The Manifesto and the Crisis Today". The Communist Manifesto (Marx, Karl and Engels, Friedrich). Bloomsbury, London: Bookmarks. p. 8.
  24. ^ "The Marx effect". The London Evening Standard. 23 April 2012. Archived from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  25. ^ Steger, Manfred B. The Quest for Evolutionary Socialism: Eduard Bernstein And Social Democracy. Cambridge, England, UK; New York City, USA: Cambridge University Press, 1997. pp. 236–37.
  26. ^ Micheline R. Ishay. The History of Human Rights: From Ancient Times to the Globalization Era. Berkeley and Lose Angeles, California: University of California Press, 2008. p. 148.
  27. ^ Michael Harrington. Socialism: Past and Future. Reprint edition of original published in 1989. New York City: Arcade Publishing, 2011. pp. 249–50.
  28. ^ Boyer 1998, p. 151.
  29. ^ The [sic!] is that of Joseph Schumpeter; see Schumpeter 1997, p. 8 n2.
  30. ^ Hobsbawm 2011, p. 108.
  31. ^ Derrida, Jacques. "What is Ideology? 10 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine" in Specters of Marx, the state of the debt, the Work of Mourning, & the New International, translated by Peggy Kamuf, Routledge 1994.
  32. ^ Warren, Christopher N (2016). "Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx. 24 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine" Humanity, Vol. 7.
  33. ^ Rose, Jonathan (2001). The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes 28 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Pgs. 26, 36-37, 122-25, 187.
  34. ^ Taylor, Antony (2002). "Shakespeare and Radicalism: The Uses and Abuses of Shakespeare in Nineteenth-Century Popular Politics." Historical Journal 45, no. 2. Pgs. 357-79.
  35. ^ Marx, Karl (1844). "On the Jewish Question."
  36. ^ Warren, Christopher (2016). "Big Leagues: Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx". Humanity. 7 (3): 365–389. doi:10.17613/M6VW8W.
  37. ^ Demetz, Peter (1967). "Economics and Intellect: Thomas Carlyle". Marx, Engels, and the Poets: Origins of Marxist Literary Criticism. Translated by Sammons, Jeffrey L. (Revised ed.). Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press. p. 37.
  38. ^ Zenzinger, Peter (2004). "Engels, Friedrich". In Cumming, Mark (ed.). The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Madison and Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. pp. 149–150. ISBN 9780838637920.
  39. ^ Zenzinger, Peter (2004). "Marx, Karl". In Cumming, Mark (ed.). The Carlyle Encyclopedia. Madison and Teaneck, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 310. ISBN 9780838637920.

References

Further reading

  • David Black, Helen Macfarlane: A Feminist, Revolutionary Journalist, and Philosopher in Mid-nineteenth-century England, 2004. Chapter 11: The Translation of The Communist Manifesto
  • Hal Draper, The Adventures of the Communist Manifesto. [1994] Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2020.
  • Dirk J. Struik (ed.), Birth of the Communist Manifesto. New York: International Publishers, 1971.

External links

  • The Communist Manifesto at Standard Ebooks
  • The Communist Manifesto at the Marxists Internet Archive
  • Manifesto of the Communist Party, an English-language translation by Progress Publishers, in PDF format
  • The Communist Manifesto in 80 world languages
  • Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei : veröffentlicht im Februar 1848 Original 1848 edition in full color scan
  •   The Communist Manifesto public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • On the Communist Manifesto 4 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine at modkraft.dk (a collection of links to bibliographical and historical materials, and contemporary analyses)
  • The Communist Manifesto at Project Gutenberg

communist, manifesto, marx, engels, redirects, here, online, archive, their, works, others, marxists, internet, archive, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unso. Marx and Engels redirects here For the online archive of their works and others see Marxists Internet Archive This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Communist Manifesto news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Communist Manifesto German Kommunistisches Manifest originally the Manifesto of the Communist Party German Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei is a political pamphlet written by German philosophers Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels Commissioned by the Communist League and originally published in London in 1848 the Manifesto remains one of the world s most influential political documents citation needed It presents an analytical approach to class struggle and criticizes capitalism and the capitalist mode of production without attempting to predict communism s potential future forms The Communist ManifestoFirst edition in GermanAuthorKarl Marx and Friedrich EngelsTranslatorSamuel MooreCountryUnited KingdomLanguageGermanGenrePhilosophyPublication date21 February 1848TextThe Communist Manifesto at WikisourceThe Communist Manifesto summarises Marx and Engels theories concerning the nature of society and politics namely that in their own words t he history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles It also briefly features their ideas for how the capitalist society of the time would eventually be replaced by socialism In the last paragraph of the Manifesto the authors call for a forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions which served as a call for communist revolutions around the world 1 2 In 2013 The Communist Manifesto was registered to UNESCO s Memory of the World Programme along with Marx s Capital Volume I 3 Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Writing 3 Publication 3 1 Initial publication and obscurity 1848 1872 3 2 Rise 1872 1917 3 3 Ubiquity 1917 present 4 Legacy 5 Influences 6 Editions 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksSynopsis EditThe Communist Manifesto is divided into a preamble and four sections The introduction begins A spectre is haunting Europe the spectre of communism 4 Pointing out that it was widespread for politicians both those in government and those in the opposition to label their opponents as communists the authors infer that those in power acknowledge communism to be a power in itself Subsequently the introduction exhorts communists to openly publish their views and aims which is the very function of the manifesto 5 The first section of the Manifesto Bourgeois and Proletarians 6 outlines historical materialism and states that the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles 7 According to the authors all societies in history had taken the form of an oppressed majority exploited by an oppressive minority In Marx and Engels time they say that under capitalism the industrial working class or proletariat engages in class struggle against the owners of the means of production the bourgeoisie 8 The bourgeoisie through the constant revolutionising of production and uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions have emerged as the supreme class in society displacing all the old powers of feudalism 9 The bourgeoisie constantly exploits the proletariat for its labour power creating profit for themselves and accumulating capital In doing so however Marx and Engels describe the bourgeoisie as serving as its own grave diggers as they believe the proletariat will inevitably become conscious of their own potential and rise to power through revolution overthrowing the bourgeoisie Proletarians and Communists the second section starts by stating the relationship of conscious communists i e those who identify as communists to the rest of the working class The communists party will not oppose other working class parties but unlike them it will express the general will and defend the common interests of the world s proletariat as a whole independent of all nationalities The section goes on to defend communism from various objections including claims that it advocates communal prostitution or disincentivises people from working The section ends by outlining a set of short term demands among them a progressive income tax abolition of inheritances and private property abolition of child labour free public education nationalisation of the means of transport and communication centralisation of credit via a national bank expansion of publicly owned land etc the implementation of which is argued would result in the precursor to a stateless and classless society The third section Socialist and Communist Literature distinguishes communism from other socialist doctrines prevalent at the time these being broadly categorised as Reactionary Socialism Conservative or Bourgeois Socialism and Critical Utopian Socialism and Communism While the degree of reproach toward rival perspectives varies all are dismissed for advocating reformism and failing to recognise the pre eminent revolutionary role of the working class Position of the Communists in Relation to the Various Opposition Parties the concluding section of the Manifesto briefly discusses the communist position on struggles in specific countries in the mid nineteenth century such as in France Switzerland Poland and lastly Germany which is said to be on the eve of a bourgeois revolution and predicts that a world revolution will soon follow It ends by declaring an alliance with the democratic socialists boldly supporting other communist revolutions and calling for united international proletarian action Working Men of All Countries Unite Writing Edit Only surviving page from the first draft of the Manifesto handwritten by Karl Marx In spring 1847 Marx and Engels joined the League of the Just who were quickly convinced by the duo s ideas of critical communism At its First Congress in 2 9 June the League tasked Engels with drafting a profession of faith but such a document was later deemed inappropriate for an open non confrontational organisation Engels nevertheless wrote the Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith detailing the League s programme A few months later in October Engels arrived at the League s Paris branch to find that Moses Hess had written an inadequate manifesto for the group now called the League of Communists In Hess s absence Engels severely criticised this manifesto and convinced the rest of the League to entrust him with drafting a new one This became the draft Principles of Communism described as less of a credo and more of an exam paper On 23 November just before the Communist League s Second Congress 29 November 8 December 1847 Engels wrote to Marx expressing his desire to eschew the catechism format in favour of the manifesto because he felt it must contain some history On the 28th Marx and Engels met at Ostend in Belgium and a few days later gathered at the Soho London headquarters of the German Workers Education Association to attend the Congress Over the next ten days intense debate raged between League functionaries Marx eventually dominated the others and overcoming stiff and prolonged opposition 10 in Harold Laski s words secured a majority for his programme The League thus unanimously adopted a far more combative resolution than that at the First Congress in June Marx especially and Engels were subsequently commissioned to draw up a manifesto for the League Upon returning to Brussels Marx engaged in ceaseless procrastination according to his biographer Francis Wheen Working only intermittently on the Manifesto he spent much of his time delivering lectures on political economy at the German Workers Education Association writing articles for the Deutsche Brusseler Zeitung and giving a long speech on free trade Following this he even spent a week 17 26 January 1848 in Ghent to establish a branch of the Democratic Association there Subsequently having not heard from Marx for nearly two months the Central Committee of the Communist League sent him an ultimatum on 24 or 26 January demanding he submit the completed manuscript by 1 February This imposition spurred Marx on who struggled to work without a deadline and he seems to have rushed to finish the job in time For evidence of this historian Eric Hobsbawm points to the absence of rough drafts only one page of which survives In all the Manifesto was written over 6 7 weeks Although Engels is credited as co writer the final draft was penned exclusively by Marx From the 26 January letter Laski infers that even the Communist League considered Marx to be the sole draftsman and that he was merely their agent imminently replaceable Further Engels himself wrote in 1883 The basic thought running through the Manifesto belongs solely and exclusively to Marx Although Laski does not disagree he suggests that Engels underplays his own contribution with characteristic modesty and points out the close resemblance between its substance and that of the Principles of Communism Laski argues that while writing the Manifesto Marx drew from the joint stock of ideas he developed with Engels a kind of intellectual bank account upon which either could draw freely 11 Publication EditInitial publication and obscurity 1848 1872 Edit A scene from the German March 1848 Revolution in Berlin In late February 1848 the Manifesto was anonymously published by the Workers Educational Association Kommunistischer Arbeiterbildungsverein based at 46 Liverpool Street in the Bishopsgate Without area of the City of London 12 Written in German the 23 page pamphlet was titled Manifest der kommunistischen Partei and had a dark green cover It was reprinted three times and serialised in the Deutsche Londoner Zeitung a newspaper for German emigres On 4 March one day after the serialisation in the Zeitung began Marx was expelled by Belgian police Two weeks later around 20 March a thousand copies of the Manifesto reached Paris and from there to Germany in early April In April May the text was corrected for printing and punctuation mistakes Marx and Engels would use this 30 page version as the basis for future editions of the Manifesto Although the Manifesto s prelude announced that it was to be published in the English French German Italian Flemish and Danish languages the initial printings were only in German Polish and Danish translations soon followed the German original in London and by the end of 1848 a Swedish translation was published with a new title The Voice of Communism Declaration of the Communist Party In June November 1850 the Manifesto of the Communist Party was published in English for the first time when George Julian Harney serialised Helen Macfarlane s translation in his Chartist magazine The Red Republican Her version begins A frightful hobgoblin stalks throughout Europe We are haunted by a ghost the ghost of Communism 13 14 For her translation the Lancashire based Macfarlane probably consulted Engels who had abandoned his own English translation half way Harney s introduction revealed the Manifesto s hitherto anonymous authors identities for the first time Immediately after the Cologne Communist Trial of late 1852 the Communist League disbanded itself A French translation of the Manifesto was published just before the working class June Days Uprising was crushed Its influence in the Europe wide Revolutions of 1848 was restricted to Germany where the Cologne based Communist League and its newspaper Neue Rheinische Zeitung edited by Marx played an important role Within a year of its establishment in May 1849 the Zeitung was suppressed Marx was expelled from Germany and had to seek lifelong refuge in London In 1851 members of the Communist League s central board were arrested by the Prussian Secret Police At their trial in Cologne 18 months later in late 1852 they were sentenced to 3 6 years imprisonment For Engels the revolution was forced into the background by the reaction that began with the defeat of the Paris workers in June 1848 and was finally excommunicated by law in the conviction of the Cologne Communists in November 1852 After the defeat of the 1848 revolutions the Manifesto fell into obscurity where it remained throughout the 1850s and 1860s Hobsbawm says that by November 1850 the Manifesto had become sufficiently scarce for Marx to think it worth reprinting section III in the last issue of his short lived London magazine Over the next two decades only a few new editions were published these include an unauthorised and occasionally inaccurate 1869 Russian translation by Mikhail Bakunin in Geneva and an 1866 edition in Berlin the first time the Manifesto was published in Germany According to Hobsbawm By the middle 1860s virtually nothing that Marx had written in the past was any longer in print However John Cowell Stepney did publish an abridged version in the Social Economist in August September 1869 15 in time for the Basle Congress Rise 1872 1917 Edit In the early 1870s the Manifesto and its authors experienced a revival in fortunes Hobsbawm identifies three reasons for this The first is the leadership role Marx played in the International Workingmen s Association aka the First International Secondly Marx also came into much prominence among socialists and equal notoriety among the authorities for his support of the Paris Commune of 1871 elucidated in The Civil War in France Lastly and perhaps most significantly in the popularisation of the Manifesto was the treason trial of German Social Democratic Party SPD leaders During the trial prosecutors read the Manifesto out loud as evidence this meant that the pamphlet could legally be published in Germany Thus in 1872 Marx and Engels rushed out a new German language edition writing a preface that identified that several portions that became outdated in the quarter century since its original publication This edition was also the first time the title was shortened to The Communist Manifesto Das Kommunistische Manifest and it became the version the authors based future editions upon Between 1871 and 1873 the Manifesto was published in over nine editions in six languages on 30 December 1871 it was published in the United States for the first time in Woodhull amp Claflin s Weekly of New York City 16 However by the mid 1870s the Communist Manifesto remained Marx and Engels only work to be even moderately well known Over the next forty years as social democratic parties rose across Europe and parts of the world so did the publication of the Manifesto alongside them in hundreds of editions in thirty languages Marx and Engels wrote a new preface for the 1882 Russian edition translated by Georgi Plekhanov in Geneva In it they wondered if Russia could directly become a communist society or if she would become capitalist first like other European countries After Marx s death in 1883 Engels provided the prefaces for five editions between 1888 and 1893 Among these is the 1888 English edition translated by Samuel Moore and approved by Engels who also provided notes throughout the text It has been the standard English language edition ever since citation needed The principal region of its influence in terms of editions published was in the central belt of Europe from Russia in the east to France in the west In comparison the pamphlet had little impact on politics in southwest and southeast Europe and moderate presence in the north Outside Europe Chinese and Japanese translations were published as were Spanish editions in Latin America The first Chinese edition of the book was translated by Zhu Zhixin after the 1905 Russian Revolution in a Tongmenghui newspaper along with articles on socialist movements in Europe North America and Japan 17 This uneven geographical spread in the Manifesto s popularity reflected the development of socialist movements in a particular region as well as the popularity of Marxist variety of socialism there There was not always a strong correlation between a social democratic party s strength and the Manifesto s popularity in that country For instance the German SPD printed only a few thousand copies of the Communist Manifesto every year but a few hundred thousand copies of the Erfurt Programme Further the mass based social democratic parties of the Second International did not require their rank and file to be well versed in theory Marxist works such as the Manifesto or Das Kapital were read primarily by party theoreticians On the other hand small dedicated militant parties and Marxist sects in the West took pride in knowing the theory Hobsbawm says This was the milieu in which the clearness of a comrade could be gauged invariably from the number of earmarks on his Manifesto Ubiquity 1917 present Edit Following the 1917 October Revolution Marx and Engels classics like The Communist Manifesto were distributed far and wide Following the October Revolution of 1917 that swept the Vladimir Lenin led Bolsheviks to power in Russia the world s first socialist state was founded explicitly along Marxist lines The Soviet Union which Bolshevik Russia would become a part of was a one party state under the rule of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union CPSU Unlike their mass based counterparts of the Second International the CPSU and other Leninist parties like it in the Third International expected their members to know the classic works of Marx Engels and Lenin Further party leaders were expected to base their policy decisions on Marxist Leninist ideology Therefore works such as the Manifesto were required reading for the party rank and file Therefore the widespread dissemination of Marx and Engels works became an important policy objective backed by a sovereign state the CPSU had relatively inexhaustible resources for this purpose Works by Marx Engels and Lenin were published on a very large scale and cheap editions of their works were available in several languages across the world These publications were either shorter writings or they were compendia such as the various editions of Marx and Engels Selected Works or their Collected Works This affected the destiny of the Manifesto in several ways Firstly in terms of circulation in 1932 the American and British Communist Parties printed several hundred thousand copies of a cheap edition for probably the largest mass edition ever issued in English Secondly the work entered political science syllabuses in universities which would only expand after the Second World War For its centenary in 1948 its publication was no longer the exclusive domain of Marxists and academicians general publishers too printed the Manifesto in large numbers In short it was no longer only a classic Marxist document Hobsbawm noted it had become a political classic tout court Total sales have been estimated at 500 million and one of the four best selling books of all time 18 Even after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc in the 1990s the Communist Manifesto remains ubiquitous Hobsbawm says that In states without censorship almost certainly anyone within reach of a good bookshop and certainly anyone within reach of a good library not to mention the internet can have access to it The 150th anniversary once again brought a deluge of attention in the press and the academia as well as new editions of the book fronted by introductions to the text by academics One of these The Communist Manifesto A Modern Edition by Verso was touted by a critic in the London Review of Books as being a stylish red ribboned edition of the work It is designed as a sweet keepsake an exquisite collector s item In Manhattan a prominent Fifth Avenue store put copies of this choice new edition in the hands of shop window mannequins displayed in come hither poses and fashionable decolletage Legacy Edit With the clarity and brilliance of genius this work outlines a new world conception consistent materialism which also embraces the realm of social life dialectics as the most comprehensive and profound doctrine of development the theory of the class struggle and of the world historic revolutionary role of the proletariat the creator of a new communist society Vladimir Lenin on the Manifesto 1914 19 A number of late 20th and 21st century writers have commented on the Communist Manifesto s continuing relevance In a special issue of the Socialist Register commemorating the Manifesto s 150th anniversary Peter Osborne argued that it was the single most influential text written in the nineteenth century 20 Academic John Raines in 2002 noted In our day this Capitalist Revolution has reached the farthest corners of the earth The tool of money has produced the miracle of the new global market and the ubiquitous shopping mall Read The Communist Manifesto written more than one hundred and fifty years ago and you will discover that Marx foresaw it all 21 In 2003 English Marxist Chris Harman stated There is still a compulsive quality to its prose as it provides insight after insight into the society in which we live where it comes from and where it s going to It is still able to explain as mainstream economists and sociologists cannot today s world of recurrent wars and repeated economic crisis of hunger for hundreds of millions on the one hand and overproduction on the other There are passages that could have come from the most recent writings on globalisation 22 Alex Callinicos editor of International Socialism stated in 2010 This is indeed a manifesto for the 21st century 23 Writing in The London Evening Standard Andrew Neather cited Verso Books 2012 re edition of The Communist Manifesto with an introduction by Eric Hobsbawm as part of a resurgence of left wing themed ideas which includes the publication of Owen Jones book Chavs The Demonization of the Working Class and Jason Barker s documentary Marx Reloaded 24 Soviet Union stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Manifesto In contrast critics such as revisionist Marxist and reformist socialist Eduard Bernstein distinguished between immature early Marxism as exemplified by The Communist Manifesto written by Marx and Engels in their youth that he opposed for its violent Blanquist tendencies and later mature Marxism that he supported 25 This latter form refers to Marx in his later life seemingly claiming that socialism under certain circumstances could be achieved through peaceful means through legislative reform in democratic societies 26 Bernstein declared that the massive and homogeneous working class claimed in the Communist Manifesto did not exist and that contrary to claims of a proletarian majority emerging the middle class was growing under capitalism and not disappearing as Marx had claimed Bernstein noted that the working class was not homogeneous but heterogeneous with divisions and factions within it including socialist and non socialist trade unions Marx himself later in his life acknowledged that the middle class was not disappearing in his work Theories of Surplus Value 1863 The obscurity of the later work means that Marx s acknowledgement of this error is not well known 27 George Boyer described the Manifesto as very much a period piece a document of what was called the hungry 1840s 28 Many have drawn attention to the passage in the Manifesto that seems to sneer at the stupidity of the rustic The bourgeoisie draws all nations into civilisation It has created enormous cities and thus rescued a considerable part of the population from the idiocy sic of rural life 29 However as Eric Hobsbawm noted W hile there is no doubt that Marx at this time shared the usual townsman s contempt for as well as ignorance of the peasant milieu the actual and analytically more interesting German phrase dem Idiotismus des Landlebens entrissen referred not to stupidity but to the narrow horizons or the isolation from the wider society in which people in the countryside lived It echoed the original meaning of the Greek term idiotes from which the current meaning of idiot or idiocy is derived namely a person concerned only with his own private affairs and not with those of the wider community In the course of the decades since the 1840s and in movements whose members unlike Marx were not classically educated the original sense was lost and was misread 30 Influences EditMarx and Engels political influences were wide ranging reacting to and taking inspiration from German idealist philosophy French socialism and English and Scottish political economy The Communist Manifesto also takes influence from literature In Jacques Derrida s work Specters of Marx The State of the Debt the Work of Mourning and the New International he uses William Shakespeare s Hamlet to frame a discussion of the history of the International showing in the process the influence that Shakespeare s work had on Marx and Engels writing 31 In his essay Big Leagues Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx Christopher N Warren makes the case that English poet John Milton also had a substantial influence on Marx and Engels work 32 Historians of 19th century reading habits have confirmed that Marx and Engels would have read these authors and it is known that Marx loved Shakespeare in particular 33 34 35 Milton Warren argues also shows a notable influence on The Communist Manifesto saying Looking back on Milton s era Marx saw a historical dialectic founded on inspiration in which freedom of the press republicanism and revolution were closely joined 36 Milton s republicanism Warren continues served as a useful if unlikely bridge as Marx and Engels sought to forge a revolutionary international coalition The Manifesto also makes reference to the revolutionary antibourgeois social criticism of Thomas Carlyle whom Engels had read as early as May 1843 37 38 39 Communism portalEditions EditKarl Marx Friedrich Engels 2004 1848 Manifesto of the Communist Party Marxists Internet Archive Retrieved on 14 March 2015 Footnotes Edit Marx s philosophy and the necessity of violent politics Stephen Hicks PhD Archived from the original on 24 September 2019 Retrieved 24 September 2019 Kuromiya Hiroaki 2017 Communism Violence and Terror in Pons Silvio Smith Stephen eds The Cambridge History of Communism Cambridge University Press pp 279 303 doi 10 1017 9781316137024 014 ISBN 9781316137024 archived from the original on 24 September 2020 retrieved 24 September 2019 Schriften von Karl Marx Das Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei 1948 und Das Kapital ernster Band 1867 Archived 22 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine UNESCO Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 34 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 34 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 35 48 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 35 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 36 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Marx Engels amp 1977 1848 p 36 7 sfn error no target CITEREFMarxEngels1977 1848 help Laski Harold 1948 Introduction Communist Manifesto Socialist Landmark George Allen and Unwin p 22 Laski Harold 1948 Introduction Communist Manifesto Socialist Landmark George Allen and Unwin p 26 Bosmajian Haig A A RHETORICAL APPROACH TO THE COMMUNIST MANIFESTO PDF dalspace library dal ca Retrieved 12 June 2022 Yeoman Louise Helen McFarlane the radical feminist admired by Karl Marx Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine BBC Scotland 25 November 2012 Usher Robert J 1910 The Bibliography of The Communist Manifesto Papers 5 109 114 JSTOR 24306239 Leopold David 2015 Marx Engels and Other Socialisms In Carver Terrell Farr James eds The Cambridge Companion to The Communist Manifesto Cambridge Cambridge University Press Marx Karl Engels Frederick 30 December 1871 German Communism Manifesto of the German Communist Party Woodhull amp Claflin s Weekly 04 7 3 7 12 13 Pons Silvio Smith Stephen A eds 2017 The Cambridge History of Communism Volume 1 World Revolution and Socialism in One Country 1917 1941 The Cambridge History of Communism Vol 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781316137024 ISBN 978 1 107 09284 6 Seven facts about Karl Marx Marx Engels Collected Works Volume 6 p xxvi Osborne Peter 1998 Remember the Future The Communist Manifesto as Historical and Cultural Form in Panitch Leo and Colin Leys Eds The Communist Manifesto Now Socialist Register 1998 London Merlin Press p 170 Available online from the Socialist Register Archived 20 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine archives Retrieved November 2015 Raines John 2002 Introduction Marx on Religion Marx Karl Philadelphia Temple University Press p 5 Harman Chris 2010 The Manifesto and the World of 1848 The Communist Manifesto Marx Karl and Engels Friedrich Bloomsbury London Bookmarks p 3 Callinicos Alex 2010 The Manifesto and the Crisis Today The Communist Manifesto Marx Karl and Engels Friedrich Bloomsbury London Bookmarks p 8 The Marx effect The London Evening Standard 23 April 2012 Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Steger Manfred B The Quest for Evolutionary Socialism Eduard Bernstein And Social Democracy Cambridge England UK New York City USA Cambridge University Press 1997 pp 236 37 Micheline R Ishay The History of Human Rights From Ancient Times to the Globalization Era Berkeley and Lose Angeles California University of California Press 2008 p 148 Michael Harrington Socialism Past and Future Reprint edition of original published in 1989 New York City Arcade Publishing 2011 pp 249 50 Boyer 1998 p 151 The sic is that of Joseph Schumpeter see Schumpeter 1997 p 8 n2 Hobsbawm 2011 p 108 Derrida Jacques What is Ideology Archived 10 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine in Specters of Marx the state of the debt the Work of Mourning amp the New International translated by Peggy Kamuf Routledge 1994 Warren Christopher N 2016 Big Leagues Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx Archived 24 September 2020 at the Wayback Machine Humanity Vol 7 Rose Jonathan 2001 The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes Archived 28 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine Pgs 26 36 37 122 25 187 Taylor Antony 2002 Shakespeare and Radicalism The Uses and Abuses of Shakespeare in Nineteenth Century Popular Politics Historical Journal 45 no 2 Pgs 357 79 Marx Karl 1844 On the Jewish Question Warren Christopher 2016 Big Leagues Specters of Milton and Republican International Justice between Shakespeare and Marx Humanity 7 3 365 389 doi 10 17613 M6VW8W Demetz Peter 1967 Economics and Intellect Thomas Carlyle Marx Engels and the Poets Origins of Marxist Literary Criticism Translated by Sammons Jeffrey L Revised ed Chicago amp London The University of Chicago Press p 37 Zenzinger Peter 2004 Engels Friedrich In Cumming Mark ed The Carlyle Encyclopedia Madison and Teaneck NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press pp 149 150 ISBN 9780838637920 Zenzinger Peter 2004 Marx Karl In Cumming Mark ed The Carlyle Encyclopedia Madison and Teaneck NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 310 ISBN 9780838637920 References EditAdoratsky V 1938 The History of the Communist Manifesto of Marx and Engels New York International Publishers Boyer George R 1998 The Historical Background of the Communist Manifesto Journal of Economic Perspectives 12 4 151 174 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 673 9426 doi 10 1257 jep 12 4 151 JSTOR 2646899 Hobsbawm Eric 2011 On the Communist Manifesto How To Change The World Little Brown pp 101 120 ISBN 978 1 408 70287 1 Hunt Tristram 2009 Marx s General The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels Metropolitan Books Schumpeter Joseph 1997 1952 Ten Great Economists From Marx to Keynes London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 11079 2 Schumpeter Joseph A June 1949 The Communist Manifesto in sociology and economics Journal of Political Economy 57 3 199 212 doi 10 1086 256806 JSTOR 1826126 S2CID 144457532 Further reading EditDavid Black Helen Macfarlane A Feminist Revolutionary Journalist and Philosopher in Mid nineteenth century England 2004 Chapter 11 The Translation of The Communist Manifesto Hal Draper The Adventures of the Communist Manifesto 1994 Chicago Haymarket Books 2020 Dirk J Struik ed Birth of the Communist Manifesto New York International Publishers 1971 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Manifesto of the Communist Party Wikimedia Commons has media related to Communist Manifesto Wikiquote has quotations related to The Communist Manifesto The Communist Manifesto at Standard Ebooks The Communist Manifesto at the Marxists Internet Archive Manifesto of the Communist Party an English language translation by Progress Publishers in PDF format The Communist Manifesto in 80 world languages Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei veroffentlicht im Februar 1848 Original 1848 edition in full color scan The Communist Manifesto public domain audiobook at LibriVox On the Communist Manifesto Archived 4 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine at modkraft dk a collection of links to bibliographical and historical materials and contemporary analyses The Communist Manifesto at Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Communist Manifesto amp oldid 1141875415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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